|
FACTS IMPACTING THE WORKPLACE
The following are some facts about and trends in health care which will
impact VA nurses in the upcoming years.
- The prevalence of Alzheimer's disease will more than triple in the next
50 years.
- Today, there are over five million caregivers in America, providing
care for individuals with dementia.
- There are an estimated 25.6 million living veterans, and an estimated
39.1 million family members of these living veterans.
- Health care spending in the U.S. increased 9.6% in 2002, growing four
times faster than the economy. Health care spending, growing much
faster than the overall economy, has been occurring since the mid-1990s.
This is expected to continue for years into the future.
- In 1965, health care spending in the U.S. was 6.5% of the gross
national product. In 2001, it was 14.1%.
- Four factors (not a comprehensive list) driving this increase in health
care spending are:
- rising labor costs;
- increased hospital costs;
- greater spending on prescription medications; and
- greater spending by physicians, e.g., ordering more lab tests, and
imaging studies.
- A Canadian study of 18,142 patients with five diseases showed 30-day
mortality rates are lower with:
- a nursing staff with higher education levels;
- a higher ratio of RNs to non-RN staff; and
- more collaborative nurse-physician relationships.
- This study also demonstrated mortality rates were higher when hospitals
use more casual or temporary nurses.
- Between 1999 and 2003, average RN staffing levels in certified
long-term care facilities declined 25%, from 0.8 to 0.6
hours/resident/day. LVN/LPN hours held steady. Nursing assistant hours
rose.
- In the next 25 years, the number of people 65 and older will nearly
double to 70 million, according to the American Geriatrics Society. The
current U.S.
population is 293 million.
|